PEW May 20, 2021
Michael Ollove

New state laws designed to protect patients from being hit with steep out-of-network medical bills may contribute to higher health care costs and premiums, some researchers warn.

Lawmakers and advocates who pushed for surprise billing laws say the measures have protected consumers from some of the most egregious bills, which can climb into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. But some researchers recently have raised alarms that doctors and other medical providers are leveraging state laws that rely on arbitration to increase in-network fees, thereby raising health care costs for everyone.

Stacey Pogue, a senior policy analyst at Every Texan, a social justice organization that pushed for a surprise billing law in Texas, said such measures “did the...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Govt Agencies, Healthcare System, Insurance, Patient / Consumer, Pricing / Spending, Provider, States, Survey / Study, Trends
Is health insurance reform the key to affordability and lower costs?
Double-Digit Tariffs Disrupt U.S. Healthcare Costs and Supply Chain Stability, Industry Leaders Warn in Black Book Poll
State Spotlight: The Use Of Provider-Based Reference Pricing In Oklahoma And South Carolina
Bill Maher Rant is Shared by Most
The $5 Trillion Question

Share This Article